Affiliation:
1. Institute of Pathology Medical Faculty University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia
2. Pathology Fimlab Laboratories and Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology Tampere University Tampere Finland
3. Faculty of Social Sciences Tampere University Tampere Finland
4. Medisyn Pathology Sonic Healthcare Lausanne Switzerland
5. United Kingdom National External Quality Assessment Service for Cellular Pathology Technique Newcastle upon Tyne UK
6. Department of Pathology Cochin Hospital University Paris Paris France
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundThere are numerous methods and procedures described for the preparation of cell blocks (CBs) from cytological samples. The objective of this study was to determine current practices and issues with CBs in European laboratories.MethodsA link to an online survey, with 11 questions about CB practices, was distributed to cytology laboratories via participants of United Kingdom National External Quality Assurance Service for Cellular Pathology Techniques and national representatives in the European Federation of Cytology Societies.ResultsA total of 402 laboratories responded completely (337/402, 84%) or partially (65/402, 16%) to the survey by February 4, 2022. The most common CB practice is embedding cell pellets using plasma and thrombin (23.3%), agar (17.1%), Shandon/Epredia Cytoblock (11.4%), HistoGel (7.9%), and Cellient (3.5%). Other methods such as CytoFoam, albumin, gelatin, Cytomatrix, and collodion bags are rarely used (1.0%, 0.7%, 0.7%, 0.3%, and 0.2%, respectively). CBs are also prepared from naturally occurring clots or tissue fragments (29.5%) and cells scraped from unstained or prestained smears (4.4%). The most frequent issues with the CBs in a daily cytology practice are low cellularity (248/402, 62%) and dispersed cells (89/402, 22%), regardless of the CBs preparation method or how the samples for embedding were selected.ConclusionsThere is a great variability in CB practices in European laboratories with low cellular CBs as the main issue. Additional studies are mandatory to evaluate and improve performance and cellular yield of CBs.
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